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New World Library | Sample Chapter


ANGEL HORSES
Divine Messengers of Hope
Allen & Linda Anderson

INTRODUCTION

All in green went my love riding
on a great horse of gold
into the silver dawn.
— e. e. cummings


Horse surveys his pasture, a kingdom inhabited by verdant grass, bales of hay, and fellow equines who graze and mill as if dancing a slow waltz.

Human approaches. A female, small in size, walking confidently on two legs, smelling like a predator. She has so far been a friend, not an enemy, so there is no reason to bolt and run. With gentle hands, making soft-voice sounds, she strokes horse skin, so sensitive that a fly’s feet can tingle nerve endings throughout the entire body.

Horse knows of Human ways and tolerates when she places heaviness on his body and inside his mouth. He hears her words commanding him and feels the sensation of her flesh touching his. He does not understand her language, only her thoughts, slightest movements, and feelings.

Human says, “Carry me into the wind. Take me to the places where I can glide close to high tree branches. I will use your body to reach the sky. Your scenting will guide me to where the sun sets. Your eyes will see to escape danger. Your lungs will expand with breath to endure the miles. Your heart will remind me to seek what I have lost. Your spirit will listen to the voices I do not hear. You are Horse. I will care for you. Together, we will journey.” Horse nods his head and snorts. He is not convinced.

He bends down and mouths her hand, looking for the stray gift of sweetness hiding there. Finding it, he scrapes his big lips against her palm, gathers it to his wide teeth, and nibbles. He munches, considering her proposal.

Human croons to Horse. She sings of hooves drumming the ground, of meadows filled with fresh clover patches and spring flowers, of cold and gurgling streams, of breezes whipping through his mane and cooling his straining body. She sings of love, friendship, and protection that only a kind Human can offer to the herd.

Horse nickers softly. He places his head on Human’s shoulder, his long neck encircling her short one. He smells the familiar fragrance of her hair as his chest presses against her heart. Horse accepts the deal.

History and Horse

As it turns out, Horse initiated the deal between Horse and Human.

In 1867 archeologists found on the American continent the remains of the Dawn Horse, which dated back sixty million years, to the Eocene period. The species called Eohippus evolved about a million years ago into Equus caballus, ancient ancestor to the modern horse. Migrating from the American continent by using land bridges to Europe and Asia, Equus and its many species made their way into every corner of the world and adapted to every climate on the planet. About ten thousand years ago horses went extinct in the Americas. As horses vanished from the western part of the world, Middle Eastern desert people raced them. Mongolians rode them into battle. African jungles gave them stripes and turned them into zebras. Europeans hitched them to carriages and rode them everywhere.

Horses returned to the Americas when Spanish conquistadors brought them back to what was actually the horse’s original home. Native Americans fell in love with Equus, domesticating horses for transportation and to hunt for food. Paul Revere rode a borrowed, unnamed horse to Lexington to warn rebellious Americans that British troops were coming to attack their city. Foreign settlers could not have conquered the new lands of America without horses to drive their wagons westward, pull their plows across plains and farmlands, and deliver their mail by Pony Express.

Horses carry history on their backs.

Today, 4 percent of American households have a horse, with 3 percent boarding their horses at home and 1 percent stabling them elsewhere. There are approximately 9.2 million horses in the United States: 40 percent of them provide recreational activities for people; 30 percent are kept as show horses; 12 percent run in races. The Minnesota Horse Expo, one of the largest horse fairs in the country and one that has taken place for twenty-four years, draws fifty breeds of horses together for a three-day, event-filled weekend with 55,000 people milling about the state fairgrounds. The horse industry in this state alone provides an economic impact of $32 billion. To say that the horse industry is big business in this country would be an understatement. Even as key actors in movies, horses are income-producing stars.

Getting to Know Horses

When we were children, we rode horses on well-worn trails with our schoolmates but never became especially proficient. We had the obligatory photos taken of child wearing cowboy hat and sitting astride horse. As adults, we occasionally go horseback riding. We haven’t had many close encounters with horses recently, although our fascination with their speed, ability, and beauty has continued to grow over the years.

Linda recalls, like many children of her generation, repeatedly reading Anna Sewell’s classic novel, Black Beauty. “After each time I read the book,” she says, “my mother would ask, ‘Why are you crying? You knew how it would end.’ I had to agree with her logic, but something in that story of the forlorn little horse moved me in an abiding way. I would put it aside for a month or so and then read it again — always with fresh tears over its poignancy.”

Allen’s childhood experiences with horses came to fruition in his early teens. He says that going to a local stable to ride the trails offered one of the best escapes from the pressures of adolescence. While the horses were used to having amateurs ride them on the designated trails, the connection he felt one afternoon with a horse named Brownie was powerful and healing.

Brownie was an older mare who appeared to take her duties one step past her job description. Doing her work for years, she knew the trails by heart — the locations of low branches, the holes, turns, and smaller, more interesting paths off the main passageway. One day Brownie gave Allen a tour of her world. He describes the afternoon by saying, “We went everywhere. Brownie was in charge, and I felt safe. For the first time in months, I was living in the moment, not constantly thinking, and she was helping me to relax by letting my concerns and stress slip away.”

Safety was Brownie’s motto. She would gallop around low branches, take a less-traveled side path, slow down at just the right time so Allen could have the opportunity to be-come aware of his surroundings, viewing the small grazing field and an almost invisible stream slowly trickling through the pebbles. Normally, as a young boy, he would have ignored the beauty surrounding him because he was in an anxious state of mind. He says, “I have no doubt that Brownie wanted to show this child, who was quickly becoming a man, what was in her world. Hers was a different world from mine because it veered off the main fast track. I look back and realize the sweet brown mare, through her actions that day, helped me to slow down and not rush to take on more in life.”

When our editor at New World Library, Georgia Hughes, asked us to write about horses as the next book in our Divine Messengers/Angel Animals series, we were a bit apprehensive because we don’t have a horse in our lives now.

We do, however, appreciate the deeply spiritual relationships between souls wearing human bodies and souls clothed in fur, feathers, and fins. Since doing hands-on research with horses and assembling the wonderful anthology of stories for this book, we are even more impressed with how innately spiritual the human-horse relationship can be. These stories show horses rising far above the instincts of their species and listening to the inner call of the Divine. Time and again, they serve as angelic messengers when humans are under duress. If people can still the chattering of minds and ignore social, intellectual, and cultural restrictions about exactly what is and is not possible, horses speak to them with astonishing clarity.

Horses are sensitive to everything and everyone around them. This makes them both receptors and messengers for God, Divine Spirit, the Sacred, or whatever you want to call the love that flows through all creation. Perhaps because they are prey animals, horses have had to learn how to tune in to the slightest changes in their inner worlds and outer environments. We learned by writing this book that if you are ever in doubt about the direction to take in your life and you need a second opinion, you couldn’t do better than to listen to a horse’s advice.

This is why we sought the help of our dear friend Lois Stanfield and her wise horse, Zeke. We first met Zeke when Lois wrote about her spiritual relationship with him for our book God’s Messengers: What Animals Teach Us about the Divine (New World Library, 2003). Be sure to read Lois’s wonderful journey-of-a-lifetime story about Zeke in chapter 1 of this book.

Whenever we went out with Lois to visit Zeke in his stable, he was always the most gracious host. He agreed to have his photo taken with us for this book. And he extended his generosity by letting us create an advice column for him to author.

“Ask Zeke” appears at the end of each chapter. We posed questions to Zeke that many people wonder about and then answered them, to the best of our ability, with what we thought he wanted to say.

Lois assures us that Zeke has lots of opinions and is quite talkative. We don’t bill ourselves as animal communicators, but by gazing into a photo that shows Zeke’s soulful eyes staring back at us, we tried to tune in to this beautiful soul. Words flowed onto the page that went far beyond anything we would have thought to say. You’ll have to decide for yourself if Zeke allowed us to respectfully tap into the horse consciousness for answers to some of life’s most perplexing questions.

Getting to Know Horse People

We observed that most horse people are straightforward, decisive, and somewhat fearless. Making commitments to care for animals who might live as long as fifty years and become equine lawn mowers instead of riding companions as they age requires people who keep their promises no matter what and are proud of it.

We also noticed that there seem to be two kinds of horse people — ones who get it and ones who don’t. By it, we mean understanding and respecting horses as sentient, conscious spiritual beings. The ones who don’t accept the higher nature, intelligence, and spirit of the horse often operate by dominance, control, and a sort of macho posturing designed to intimidate both horses and people. Of course, we are making generalizations here. Each species is complex, and individuals can’t be glibly categorized or labeled. But you get the picture. You know the types.

Consequently, it appeared to us that before revealing themselves, horses always check out whether they’re dealing with a horse person who gets it or one who does not. Horses wear blank expressions or masks of quiet wariness. A horse quickly learns the art of discretion. Humans are capricious at best and cruel at worst. There is not much the horse can do about it either way.

So horses have perfected passive-aggressiveness to assert their individuality and covertly express their opinions. Horses make jokes at humans’ expense— playfully if the person is nice and secretly if the human is mean. To be themselves, spooked or stubborn horses rise up on powerful haunches and toss their human riders. They bite and kick when threatened or guarding their turf. Horses escape by using whatever resources they can muster to unlock paddock or stall gates with their teeth or kick down doors. Freeing themselves of human burdens becomes a mission for those who long to run freely and feel the blood of wild animals coursing through their veins.

Fortunately for readers of this book and for us, bona fide horse people who get it were willing to share their stories. They honor and respect horses and here provide glimpses of the experiences and re-lationships that are possible between spiritual beings who view one another as equals.

Terminology

Can a person own a horse?

Horses are bought and sold as commodities. This is not the same as owning them. Horses can be beaten down physically and emotionally. This also is not the same as owning them. We have concluded that it is impossible to own a horse — or any other animal, for that matter.

This said, many of the contributing authors in this book use the word owner because ownership is how people move horses from one place to another. After speaking and corresponding with our contributing authors many times, we believe that they would agree that the spirit, the heart, of a horse is too great to be possessed just because money has been exchanged. So for purposes of smoother communication, we have left the word owner in their stories. Trying to substitute preferable words like guardian or caretaker or the horse’s person seemed to complicate and slow down the storytelling. The truth of the matter is that in today’s society, owning horses is how the law protects human-horse relationships.

We have continued, though, as we do in all our writings, to refer to horses as who, she, he, they and not as it or that. This terminology may seem like a small distinction, but with the preciseness of language, it proclaims that horses are not objects.

For other terms that horse people understand but that sound like a foreign language to the general public, we rely on the context of the sentences or stories for definition. It slows momentum too much to stop and define dressage, show horse, or training terms. Readers who are interested in understanding more will no doubt do some additional research.

However, a few terms used frequently in the book need explanation. One of them is the practice of describing a horse’s size in hands. Horses used to be measured by starting from the ground and placing the palm of your hand vertically against the horse while pointing your fingers at the tail and moving your hands up to the horse’s shoulders, or withers. A hand was estimated to be about four inches. So to find a horse’s size in feet and inches, multiply the hands figure by four inches and then divide that number by twelve inches. Basically, a 17-hand horse is as huge as a young elephant. A pony would be smaller than 14 hands.

When someone says that a horse nickers, this is a sign of friendliness. Neighing is the equivalent of a loud hello or the question, Where are you?

Some authors in the book refer to training their horses with natural horsemanship methods. According to the Naturally Penzance website article “What Is Natural Horsemanship?” the system is “the art of working, training, riding with horses in a manner which works with the horse’s behavior, instincts, and personality in an easy and kind manner.” (Sounds good to us!) World-renowned trainers such as John Lyons, Pat Parelli, Buck Brannaman, Tom Dorrance, Linda Tellington-Jones, Clinton Anderson, and Monty Roberts, among others, all have their own styles and practices of natural horsemanship that they teach to thousands of horse owners annually.

While doing research for this book, we met a delightful woman who practices natural horsemanship with a small herd of rescued horses. Suzanne Perry and her husband and two children are all horse lovers. Suzanne likes to tell the story about her mother driving to work one day watching in shock as her five-year-old daughter took an unsupervised, bareback, full-gallop ride on a neighbor’s horse while clutching the horse’s streaming mane in the wind and laughing and crying for joy. In Suzanne’s world there are only two types of people — those who love horses and those who don’t. She refers to herself as an animal sensitive who instinctively anticipates horses’ needs and has great success educating young riders. She says that to her “horse manure is the perfume of the gods.” She calls herself “a two-legged horse” and “an interpreter for the equine mind.”

Suzanne graciously let us follow her and her daughter, “who rides a horse so well that she looks like she has Velcro on her bottom.” They introduced us to the horses whom Suzanne says nobody else wants. With camera ready and pad and paper in hand, we interviewed Suzanne, her children, and her horses. They gave us thorough lessons about today’s horse world. When we left the barn and pastures where Suzanne works, she said something very profound, a theme that is reflected throughout this book. Suzanne said, “I’m seeing me through my horse’s eyes.”

Join Us for a Journey into Angel Horse World

The subtitle of Angel Horses is Divine Messengers of Hope. This book is divided into four chapters, each of which contains stories that chronicle experiences people have had with horses who gave them hope. With their innate wisdom and sixty-million-year-old worldview, horses offer hope for love and the fulfillment of dreams, hope for having courage and endurance, hope for healing and regaining health, and hope for spiritual connection and reuniting after death.

The people who contributed their stories wrote short biographies about themselves. Be sure to read them in the back of the book. You will find that these contributors are ordinary people who have gained spiritual insights because of their relationships with a horse or horses.

If you open your heart and mind to them, these stories will remind you of your own glimpses into invisible realms. The stories will fill you with love and gratitude. They will introduce or reacquaint you with the spirit of the horse. These stories of angels among us will give you hope.

Excerpted from ANGEL HORSES Copyright © 2006 by New World Library

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